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Wisconsin State Journal from Madison, Wisconsin • 1

Location:
Madison, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 r- 7 'J 7 yr 7 i .9 l' 7 Wiscomsiio. A State Jo.tiriaal WEATHER: Rain Ending Today, Windy and Colder. Cold Tonight With Low in Mid 30s. MADISON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1973 10 46 Pages, Four Sections Vor. 217, No.

199 133rd Year FINAL $Bwd Trait ra Wfe fa DD Lunney Runs Third mc Psft Is Op Apr. 3 Sets a Showdown (or 2 Clivals to IReDimke, CCiuibllv candidate was criticized by his opponents for heavy primary campaign spending, which is By MICHAEL BAUMAN Of The State Journal Staff Madison voters Tuesday set up a clear choice in the Apr. 3 mayoral election Mayor William D. Dyke against Aid. Paul Soglin, Eighth Dist.

The result of the primary was partially predictable, The final vote was: Reinke ..16,503 Kubly ..13,413 William Lunney ..12,088 Richard Lehmann 4,803 Miles Riley ...4,685 Vaughn Cooper ,..2,281 RoySchenk 1,757 John Nietupski 571 By PATRICIA SIMMS Of The State Journal Staff Dane County voters Tuesday picked County Administrator George Reinke, 58, and department store executive Daniel Kubly, 31, to face each other in the April 3 race for the newly-created county executive expected to exceed a record $10,000 when all the expenses are in. Reinke, a county employe for more than 30 years, spent an estimated half of the $10,000 fig Kubly, a first-time political ure in the primary, but relied heavily on previous experience with county government. LUNNEY, currently on leave from his job as assistant administrative director of the Wisconsin court system, came within 1,300 votes of toppling Kubly, but lost heavily in the rural areas. RILEY, 52, who returned to Madison last fall after 14 years in Green Bay, corralled fewer votes than had been predicted, UK 1. it MA It JH (IT I 1 1 nil.) ii in ii iv i i im wnn ii i 4ft, iJ as Dyke coasted to a nomination for a run at his third term in office with 16,243 votes, about 36 per cent of the total, and a margin of nearly 4,800 over his nearest challenger.

BUT IT was that nearest challenger Soglin who offered the surprise. He was a decisive second, more than 1,100 votes ahead of the third place finisher, David Stewart. Leo Cooper, the 1971 nominee against Dyke, faded to a distant fourth, with little more than half of Soglin's total. The final result was: Dyke 16,213 Soglin 11,485 Stewart 10,350 Cooper 6,150 R. Whelan Burke 283 David Robb 161 Joseph Kraemer 122 Mark Gregersen 27 THE TOTAL vote was a high 44,926, about 43 per cent of DANIEL KUBLY GEORGE REINKE pulling less that 10 per cent of WILLIAM DYKE i ii nil unit 14 the total 56,101 cast.

Other competitors for the position included Lehmann, 32, an alderman from Madison's Sixth Cooper, Record Rainfall Floods Madison 27, a former newspaper re porter; Nietupski, 22, a University of Wisconsin-Madison graduate student; and Schenk, 43, a research bio-chemist for Bjork-sten Research Laboratories, f- THE POSITION of county ex PAUL SOGLIN By JUNE DIECKMANN Of The State Journal Staff A record deluge, complete with thunder and lightning, turned Madison and suburban streets into rivers from 9 p.m. to mid- ecutive was created by the vot nicht Tuesday with storm sewers unable to handle the downpour. ers last November when they approved a referendum on the Emergency Street Truck Crew 783, franically unplugging de issue, 59.255-39,486. bris from street drains, reported it could maKe no neaa- those registered, about 3,000 more than anticipated, and another surprise considering the miserable weather that persisted, throughout Primary Day. Dyke ran consistently well in all areas of the city, with the exception of the central city, student-dominated districts.

There, Soglin built large ma floodcd srects in all tloodcu sreets in way on Saigon to Free More Prisoners SAIGON, Wednesday on The South Vietnamese government agreed today to release 6.300 Communist military prisoners of war, breaking an eight-day impasse that threatened tha entire prisoner exchange program and the United States-Vi brief power blackout in the area POLE WATCHER The election activity was at a minimum, but there was action at Madison Fire Station No. 8 Tuesday. While two voters waited to cast their ballots at the Second Dist. polling place, Fireman Phillip Vorlander slid down the pole to answer an ambulance call to a nearby traffic accident. Pollworkers at the station include, from left, Mrs.

Vivian Wagner, Mrs. Hazel McCabe, and Mrs. Gordon Albrecht. State Journal Photo by A. Craig Benson of Jenifer St.

and Cantwell Ct. Fire Dept. crews were called The question carried in both rural and urban areas, unlike 1970, when rural opposition defeated the issue. The elected executive, chosen for a four-year term, at $24,000 yearly salary, will re- place the county administrator, to control the'Jenifer St. arcing parts of Madison.

"We're fighting a losing battle until the rain stops," one crewman said. "The sewers just can't take this much water." AS OF MIDNIGHT, a rainfall of 1.83 inches had been recorded jorities, but that as ex wires, remove heavy water threatening to cave in a roof at pected. He made inroads on Heating Oil, Gasoline Covered 217 N. Orchard and alle both sides of Madison, apparently taking away much of an appointed position created at the Truax Field Weather Sta viate basement flooding at 37 N. Randall Ave.

and 4330 Portland by the County Board in 1970. Cooper's strength on the East Side. THE EXECUTIVE serves as Parkway. the head of county government, STEWART DID reasonably tion, and it was expected to top 2 inches this morning. The previous Mar.

6 record was .96 of an inch in 1956. with a veto that only a two- well on the West Side, again as Price Ceiling Restored on Major Oil Products Glenna Howell, 23, of 2618 Fairfield PL, was taken by fire ambulance at 10:17 p.m. in the expected, but could not overcome Soglin's center city City and county police an thirds vote of the board can override. The office was believed to height of the downpour to Uni swered at least 30 calls to aid strength, and did very little on the East Side. have attracted so many pri motorists whose cars were stalled in 2-foot-deep water on versity Hospital for treatment of back and hip injuries received in a traffic crash in the WASHINGTON (UPI) The ceiling has been placed on how rules are petroleum products ei Cooper picked up much less mary candidates because of the minimal number of signatures reauired on the nomination pa flat-level streets.

much oil companies can raise East Side support than was ex 1000 block of E. Johnson St. ther manufactured or purchased for resale, and crude oil either Some streets, such as under etnamese military peacekeeping commission itself. There were some indications that -the Saigon government gave in to the Communist demands at U.S. insistence since the further release of American POWs might also be threatened if the impasse continued.

The South Vietnamese had been offering to release only 3,000 prisoners. The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong delegations said they would boycott meetings of the Joint Military Commission until South Vietnam agreed to release a fourth of the POWs it still holds, or about 6,300. "The details of the releases, times, and locations will be determined by the subcommis-sion on prisoner a U.S. spokesman said. County police said they were the price of gasoline, heating oil, and other petroleum prod pected, and four other candidates mustered less than 600 the N.

Park St. railroad under pers for a candidate's name to produced or acquired domestl called to pull out several pass, and from Bonner Lane on Cost of Living Council ordered price controls restored on the nation's biggest petroleum companies Tuesday "to assure the American consumer an adequate supply of oil at reasona ucts they sell to retailers or di appear on the ballot. Onlv 20 sienatures were nec cally or imported for resale. votes among them. stranded motorists from a the East Side to downtown S.

These items account for 76 After the nomination, the essary, instead of the Franklin St. to Tolman Terrace "lake" that surrounded the newly-reopened Whiskey nude rectly to consumers. The rules cover products with annual sales of about $61-billion. per cent of industry cross sales usually brash Soglin came up on the West Side, were flooded worth about $61-billion, the with another surprise. "I just enough to strand traffic, police dancing nightspot, 2611 W.

Belt line. ble prices." The order means the oil in Council Director John T. Dun- council said. reported. lop said the action "is not a pu required in Milwaukee county for the executive position.

Sniper's Victim Dies of Injuries NEW ORLEANS A New don't have much to say," he smiled at newsmen. "I've got no statement to make now." MONONA POLICE reported Examples of products covered nitive measure; it is desgned to by the rules are gasoline, home ELECTRIC WIRES shorted out by the heavy rain caused a Turn to Page 2, Cot. 6 heating oil, natural gas, avia prevent increasing pressure for higher crude oil and petroleum tion fuel, lubricants and dustry, like the food, construction, and health industries, will be subject to stricter economic behavior than other businesses which can follow the voluntary wage-price guidelines of the Nixon Administration's Phase "I REALLY hope we can win, really think we can win in Turn to Page 2, Col. 3 Orleans police sergeant product prices from triggering Law Officers Die in Own Shootout greases, and petrochemicals. wounded by a sniper last New inflationary price increases." Petroleum products cx rest the Clintwood town officer Year's Eve died in a hospital The special rules, which cover empt from the tighter controls! for driving under the influence of alcohol.

23 firms with about 95 per cent include asphalt, fertilizers, and III stabilization program. here Monday night. Authorities said the .44 caliber maenum carbine used to of the industry gross sales, waxes. CLINTWOOD, Va. ui Two law enforcement officers were killed and a third wounded Tuesday in a shootout among the three in this southwest Virginia community, police said.

UNDER THE tougher rules, a are neceswry because of the Breeding identified the dead as Town Officer Julius Stanley The rules allow companies an shoot Sgt. Edwin Hosli, 30, was More Primary Election News Sec. 4, Pages 1, 3 widespread impact of the oil ln the same one recovered after and Deputy Sheriff Duran Ra automatic 1 per cent price in- dustry on the economy, Dunlop tliff, both of Clintwood. Chief police killed Mark Essex atop said. Turn to Page 2, Col.

7 the Downtown Howard John Dickenson County Sheriff Deputy Sheriff Ted Rose, Tar Today's Chuckle It's much easier to borrow trouble than it is to give it away. A CRITICAL shortage of son's motel Jan. 7. The sniper Richard Breeding said the pon, was wounded in the arm and stomach and was home heating oil in the Midwest shooting erupted when two sher killed seven persons before he was shot on the motel's roof. taken to a hospital.

iff's deputies attempted to ar and New England sparked the council's action, but the order covered a much wider range of Viet Peace Can Be Maintained, Rogers Tells House Committee products. Included under the special Calls Slayings 'Intolerable Crime Sudanese President to Get Tough On the Inside WASHINGTON Secretary of State William P. Rogers eight terrorists demanding free told the House Foreign Affairs dom for Arab prisoners in sev Committee on Tuesday he is confident a military peace can eral countries. Wisconsin Wins Hockey Playoff Sec. Sports Peach The American victims were tacks in Lebanon should fight in the land of aggression, not In the embassy of our brothers," he said.

"There Is no heroism in seizing a few unarmed people to hold them hostage at gunpoint for demands that everyone knows are Impossible to meet Ambassador Geo A. Noel 54, and G. Curtis Moore, 50, whose bodies have been re turned to the U.S. for burial be maintained in Vietnam. Testifying about the international agreement to support the ceasefire In Vietnam, Rogers said: "I do not expect there will be any major military engagements In that area." THE SECRETARY, under persistent questioning, said he gram for North Vietnam would require prior congressional approval.

"There will be no attempt to hide anything from Congress," he said in the face of some evident hostility. One committee member, Rep. Wayne Hays (D-Ohio), told Rogers: "I'm not going to accept money for North Vietnam when there is no money for housing for tho elderly." Hays also threatened to stall his subcommittee's review of the State Dept. budget and said he might sponsor an amendment to bar any fundi for Hanoi without direct approval of Congress. REP.

II. R. GROSS (R-Ia.) said bluntly: "I would not give Turn to Fag 2, Cot. I 4, Page 14 Sec. 4, Page 14 Sec.

4, Page 14 Sec. 1, Page 4 Sec. 1, Page 12 Sec. 3 today. THE GUERRILLAS surrcn and then slaughtering them like KHARTOUM.

Sudanw-Prcsldcnt Jaafar Numalri, denouncing the slaying of three foreign diplomats in Khartoum as an. "intolerable crime," said Tuesday night he will not be licnlcnt with the Black September guerrillas who did It. He said the guerrillas will be brought to trial for murder. i WILL LEAVE Justice In our country to take its course," Numalri said. "I have high confidence lw Judgment will be firm ond its punishment will be Just." Numalri called on all Arab countries to Join him in condemning the attack at the Saudi UK sheep," the 9 i said.

dered early Sunday, releasing SECRETARY ROGERS "This is contrary to the Moslem unharmed the Saudi Arabian religion." Sec. 4, Page 14 thought the opposing factions in flchtinjr Is decrcasinff In Vict- ambassador and the Jordanian Bridge Comics Crossword Day by Day Editorials Look Markets Movie Times Obituaries Records Rcston TV-Radio Weather Table PRESIDENT NUMAIRI The American ambassador to Vk'tnam had decided war was nam and "has about stopped" charge d' affairs. Sudan, the I United not going to solve, the problems In Laos. which two Americans and In a speech broadcast night over Sudan's Omdur Belgian were murdered. States charge d'affaires, and the Belgian charge affaires were shot dead in the embassy Sec.

1. Page 4 i Sec 4 Page 2 Sec. 1, Page 8 Sec. 1, Page 14 4, Page 15 Sec. 1, Tact 2 "Nobody expected this was going to be solved easily," he added.

of Indochina. Rogers said he was encouraged by the fact that "we have man radio, Numairi Baid the Black September attack "Those who want to avenge the Israeli shooting down of the last Friday, the day after it was Rogers also assurrd the com not had any large scale viola Libvaa airliner and armed at Tum to Pag 2, Cot. 7 seized during a reception, by Arabian Embassy ucdi lu, tions" of the ceasefire, and thatjmlttce that any atshitancc pro rr.

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